: A descriptive guide covering over 1,000 active monasteries and churches in Greece along with histories of numerous saints, wonderworking relics and icons, and the miracles associated with them. Includes several maps, photos, lives of saints with their dismissal hymns, several indices, a glossary, English-Greek phrase section and extensive bibliography. Paperback. 949pp.

: A descriptive guide covering over 1,000 active monasteries and churches in Greece along with histories of numerous saints, wonderworking relics and icons, and the miracles associated with them. Includes several maps, photos, lives of saints with their dismissal hymns, several indices, a glossary, English-Greek phrase section and extensive bibliography. Paperback. 949pp.

[[Category:Greek Monasteries]]

[[Category:Greek Monasteries]]

Revision as of 05:07, July 1, 2008

The Monastery of St. Nicholas in Andros is, according to tradition, built in the 8th-century though it is not mentioned in any historical books until the 14th-century. This monastery houses wonderful frescos and an architecturly superb wooden screen. The Byzantine icon of Panagia Blachernae, donated by the Monastery in Constantinople of the same name, is still kept in this monastery and is myrrh-bearing; she is known in Greece as the Panagia of Andros.

The icons in St. Nicholas

The Panagia of Andros is an ancient and myrrhstreaming icon, always surrounded with a powerful sweet-spicy fragrance. Great wonders occur from this holy icon and myrrh streams from it endlesly. There are even reports that people have been resurrected from the dead through the miracle working icon.

There is also an ancient icon of the Virgin Mary that has significantly changed its facial expression over the last few years. The authorship has turned exceedingly sorrowful and tears have been flowing from her eyes. In 1999, this icon cried unceasingly coinciding with the bombardment of Serbia at that time.

The monastery also houses the icon of St. Nicholas, and some of his relics; the icon was authored by a nun named Leondia who weaved her own hair into the icon. According to the locals of this Metropolis, this icon is the most active in the entire of Andros.

Bibliography

A descriptive guide covering over 1,000 active monasteries and churches in Greece along with histories of numerous saints, wonderworking relics and icons, and the miracles associated with them. Includes several maps, photos, lives of saints with their dismissal hymns, several indices, a glossary, English-Greek phrase section and extensive bibliography. Paperback. 949pp.